Review
For most of us mathematics is ancient and ossified, like Latin. Yet if a single thread runs through these 25 interviews and profiles of living mathematicians, it is that their work is far from dead. The editors, both math professors, want Mathematical People to dispel the notion that mathematicians are remote, unapproachable, aloof, and may be even a bit strange. --Terence Monmaney,
Science
In Mathematical People, 25 welcome and often engaging profiles of or conversations with the men and women of mathematics, we discover that mathematicians have clear recollections of when they fell in love with the subject. Books like Mathematical People can also be instruments of the subject s survival. By introducing the public to otherwise normal human beings who happen to love mathematics, helps make the subject less frightfully alien. --Michael A. Guillen, The New York Times
Unless your next-door neighbor happens to be a mathematician, you won t find a more human introduction to mathematics than Mathematical People. The book relies on short, lively interviews instead of scholarly biography to dramatize the daily lives, work, and hopes of some 20 modern mathematicians. --Frank Morgan, Technology Review
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Product Description
This unique collection contains extensive and in-depth interviews with mathematicians who have shaped the field of mathematics in the twentieth century. Collected by two mathematicians respected in the community for their skill in communicating mathematical topics to a broader audience, the book is also rich with photographs and includes an introduction by Philip J. Davis.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
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